Ketchikan Excursions & Tours for Cruise Visitors in Southeast Alaska
Small-group tours designed around your time in port - whale watching, rainforest walks, and unique local experiences in Ketchikan.
Choosing the Right Ketchikan Excursion
The clock is already running before you decide what to do. Most cruise travelers step off the gangway with four to eight hours in port, and that window moves faster than it looks.
Weighing shore excursions from the ship's desk, aggregator platforms, and local operators all at once can feel like a lot. But the decision isn't complicated — the guests who leave most satisfied are almost always the ones who had a plan.
Each outing below has a dedicated page with pricing and booking info. Start here, then go deeper on whatever fits your schedule.
Curated Tours in Southeast Alaska
🐋 Wildlife & Whale Watching Tour
The waters surrounding this port sit inside one of the most ecologically rich marine corridors on the Pacific coast. Humpback whales, orca, Steller sea lions, bald eagles — this coastline is consistently active, and a small-group boat outing puts you in the middle of it without the noise of a larger vessel.
Wildlife sightings can't be promised — the ocean operates on its own terms. What our local guides offer is genuine knowledge of the routes, timing, and locations that consistently produce results. An easy excursion in terms of physical demand, with comfortable onboard access.
Built around cruise-port schedules. Return timing communicated before you book.
Read more on whale watching tour
⏱ ~3.5 hours | 💰 From $250 | 👥 Small groups
🌲 Rainforest Walking Tour
Ketchikan borders the Tongass National Forest — 17 million acres of temperate rainforest, the largest of its kind in the world. This guided walk brings you into it without requiring serious fitness or specialized gear. A moderate excursion for most guests, and far more rewarding than it might sound on paper.
The route covers old-growth forest, natural history, and the Indigenous cultures — Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian — that have shaped this region for thousands of years. A small excursion in size, but not in what it covers.
⏱ ~2 hours | 💰 From $150 | 👥 Small groups
🍵 High Tea (Cannabis-Optional)
Not every afternoon in port needs a boat or a trail. The High Tea is a small-group gathering with locally sourced food, quality tea, and a setting most visitors don't expect from a cruise port stop.
An optional cannabis-infused menu is available for guests 21 and older, in full compliance with Alaska state law. Items are clearly marked and never pushed — the non-infused version is complete on its own. Valid government-issued ID required for the infused menu. No pressure, no obligation.
A different way to spend an afternoon. One that tends to stick.
⏱ ~2 hours | 💰 From $50 | 👥 Small groups 21+ only for infused items | Valid ID required | Alaska state law compliant
Not sure which fits your schedule? Contact us with your arrival and departure times and we'll help you figure it out.
Shore Excursions vs. Booking Direct
Cruise passengers have plenty of options — the ship's desk, aggregator platforms, TripAdvisor, Reddit. When you're comparing Ketchikan tours online, the differences aren't always obvious. Here's where they actually matter.
Locally Owned and Operated
We're based here — not managed from a platform office in another city. When you reach out before your trip, you're talking to someone who runs these outings personally.
Small Groups by
Design
Large operators depend on volume. Ours doesn't. Smaller numbers mean better logistics, less time waiting, and more room to notice what's around you.
Direct
Communication
Book through an aggregator and your reservation lives with a platform. If something changes, you're navigating a third-party system. Book direct and you reach us — simpler in every scenario.
Cruise Schedule Awareness
Getting back on board on time isn't optional. Every outing is built around the port window, return timing communicated before you book, buffer built in.
No Middleman
Markup
Platform bookings mean platform cuts. Book directly and that money stays local.
| Us | Cruise Line / Aggregator | |
|---|---|---|
| Group Size | Small — always | Often 30–100+ guests |
| Your Contact | Local operator, direct | Call centre or platform |
| Port Logistics | Built into every outing | Variable — read the fine print |
| Pricing | No platform markup | Commission adds cost |
| Flexibility | Contact us directly | Fixed packages |
| Local Knowledge | We live and work here | Often managed remotely |
About Ketchikan Alaska
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Ketchikan is a small city of about 8,000 year-round residents on Revillagigedo Island in Southeast Alaska. It sits at the edge of the Tongass National Forest, facing the Clarence Strait, and receives more than a million visitors during the summer season. For many, it's their first real contact with what Alaska actually looks like.
That geography is why the range of activities here is so varied — forest, marine habitat, cultural history, bear viewing opportunities along stream corridors during salmon runs. All within a few miles of the dock. Unlike the infrastructure of Anchorage or the glacier access common to ports further north, the draw here is immediacy: wilderness starts where the town ends.
The waterfront is walkable from the pier. Creek Street — a restored historic district built on boardwalks over Ketchikan Creek — tells the story of the town's gold rush and fishing-industry roots. Totem Bight State Historical Park holds one of the finest collections of restored totem poles in Alaska. Misty Fjords National Monument lies to the east — a glacier-carved protected wilderness area of striking scale, accessible by floatplane or small boat.
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The marine environment here is genuinely productive. Humpback whales feed in these waters through summer. Orca move through the Inside Passage regularly. Steller sea lions occupy the nearshore rocks. Black bear are sometimes visible along forest edges and stream banks during salmon season. Bald eagles appear often enough around town that most visitors stop noticing them within the first hour ashore.
Five Pacific salmon species run through local waterways — chinook, sockeye, coho, pink, and chum — and watching them push upstream through town at peak season is something that has to be seen.
We don't guarantee specific sightings. Conditions here are consistently strong during summer, and we plan our routes accordingly — but the water operates on its own schedule.
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The pier is right in the heart of downtown. Creek Street, the totem parks, the waterfront, the Discovery Center — all within comfortable walking distance. Getting oriented takes minutes.
What takes planning is time. The port window is fixed and it moves fast. Contact us with your ship's arrival and departure times before you book — we'll tell you honestly what fits.
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Ketchikan is one of the wettest cities in North America. Annual rainfall can exceed 150 inches. Pack a waterproof jacket — not water-resistant, waterproof. Layers underneath. Footwear that handles wet ground.
The forest looks better in the rain. Everything's greener, the light through the canopy is different, the creeks run full. Don't let a forecast change your plans. Just pack for it.
| Port Window | Best Fit | What to Expect |
|---|---|---|
| ~4 hours | Rainforest Walking Tour | Two hours in old-growth forest, time to eat near the pier before boarding. |
| ~5–6 hours | Whale Watching | 3.5 hours on the water with comfortable buffer to the dock. |
| ~6–8 hours | Whale Watching + High Tea | Morning on the water, relaxed afternoon in port. Fully achievable. |
| Something relaxed | High Tea Experience | Low-effort, social, and genuinely different from anything else at this stop. |
| Wildlife & open water | Whale Watching | The anchor outing for most first-time visitors to Southeast Alaska. |
Planning Your Time in Port
How much time you have changes everything. Match your port window to the right activity level before you arrive.
Kayaking Tours & Other Activities
If active water-based options or hiking appeal to you, there are reputable local providers in the area. Our curated tours focus on whale watching, guided forest walks, and the high tea — but we're happy to point you toward other options if our lineup doesn't fit.
A map of exact meeting points and logistics is included with every booking confirmation.
What Guests Are Saying
Frequently Asked Questions
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That depends on what you're looking for. Whale watching puts you directly in Southeast Alaska's most active marine habitat. The rainforest walk covers history and landscape at a calmer pace. The high tea is genuinely unlike anything else at this port. Most guests have time for one; some combine two. We're happy to help you work out the timing before you arrive.
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Yes — and this isn't a throwaway assurance. Every outing is built around the port window, with clear departure and return times communicated before you book. We know the dock schedule. Buffer is built in. If your itinerary changes, contact us directly. We have never left a guest scrambling to board, and we intend to keep that record. That's why many guests book ahead of arrival.
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No. Any operator who guarantees wildlife sightings isn't being straight with you. The waters here are consistently productive during summer, our guides know where to position the boat, and the vast majority of guests see something significant. We operate in conditions that produce results — not conditions that produce luck.
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Recreational cannabis is legal in Alaska for adults 21 and older. The optional infused menu in our High Tea is available to guests 21+ only, fully compliant with Alaska state law, clearly labeled, and completely optional. Valid government-issued ID required. The non-infused version is complete on its own.
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A waterproof jacket — real waterproof, not just treated fabric. Layers underneath. Footwear that handles wet ground. On the whale watching outing, wind on open water makes it feel colder than the air temperature suggests. An extra layer on the boat is worth it.
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Close. The pier is in the center of town and all departures are within easy walking or short driving distance. Exact meeting point details are provided when you book.
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We run small-group departures as our standard format. For guests looking to arrange something for their party specifically, contact us directly to discuss availability.
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Yes, depending on your window. Whale watching in the morning paired with the high tea in the afternoon is the most common combination. Contact us with your ship's times and we'll help work it out.
Use Your Port Time Well
A few hours in port goes faster than it looks. We're locally owned, small-group focused, and built for exactly this situation. No aggregator, no guesswork, no bulk tours.
Choose the outing that fits your time in port. Book directly. We'll handle the rest.
Locally owned and operated in Ketchikan, Alaska. Fully licensed and insured. Serving cruise visitors and independent travelers throughout Southeast Alaska.